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Who among us has never, at some contemplative
point in our lives or another, asked ourselves the truly big
questions, questions about the ultimate meaning of this world, and
of our lives in it? Questioning the reason for our human
existence is a very natural pursuit on the part of any human
being. Indeed, unlike any other species of life, human beings
alone have been gifted by God with the unique cognitive ability to
engage in self-reflection upon our very own existence as human
beings. To be human means to question what it means to be human.
It is especially when such existential
questions arise in our minds that we find ourselves understandably
turning to the precise fields of knowledge that deal most directly
with such questions: the sister fields of religion and
philosophy. In the following, I will answer this universal query
from the perspective of the most ancient religio-philosophical
system on earth, Sanatana Dharma.
The nature of existence has been dealt with
by many philosophers, both Western and Asian, from the beginning
of time. Whether we are speaking of Thomas Aquinas and his
metaphysical distinction of existence and essence, Soren
Kierkegaard and his attempts to come to grips with the problem of
existence from a Protestant perspective, the Existentialists of
the 20th Century, or the Samkhya and Vedanta schools of
Sanatana Dharma, the nature of our existence has been on the minds
of some of history’s greatest thinkers.
The most basic of all philosophical questions
that can be asked is: Why do human beings exist? When I open my
eyes in the morning, why is it that there is something rather than
nothing? In order to sufficiently analyze this question, the
question itself really needs to be divided into two closely
related questions: a) why do we exist at all, b) why do we exist
as human beings. I’ll try to answer both from the perspective of
Yoga spirituality and Sanatana Dharma.
According to the ancient wisdom of Dharma, we
exist to begin with because it’s our very innate nature to exist.
The sacred scriptures of both Yoga and Sanatana Dharma teach us
that our true, innermost nature is that we are atman, or eternal
units of consciousness. We have the Absolute (Brahman, or God) as
both our causative and substantial source, and as the ontological
sustainer of our existential being. Having God as our underlying
source, it necessarily follows that we naturally share in many of
God’s essential attributive qualities. Because we participate in
God’s innate attributes - and if not to a quantitatively
equivalent degree, then certainly to a qualitative one - we too
share in many of God’s qualities. One of those attributes that
both God and we have in common is necessary existence. In other
words, both God and we ourselves (atmans, or souls) are eternal by
our inherent nature. God and individual atmans cannot but exist.
To go out of existence is simply not within the realm of our
capability.
Never was there a time when we came into
being, and never will there be a time when we cease to exist. So,
in a way, we exist because we cannot but exist, being purely
spiritual beings in essence. Such is our nature, for it is the
nature of God, the ultimate source of our being.
A deeper question than the principle of
necessary existence, however, is: why is it the case that we were
even gifted with necessary existence to begin with? Sanatana
Dharma answers this in the following manner. Brahman (God) is One
(ekam). But as a natural result of the overflowing abundance of
the Infinite, God decides to become more than One. God thus
becomes One-with-attributes (vishishta-advaita). Consequently, in
addition to Brahman, we also have atman (individual selves) and
jagat (materiality). As atman, we have our own individual
existence in attributive relationship with Brahman (God) in order
to know, and love, and serve Brahman.
The second part of our question on human
existence – “why do we exist as human beings?” – can then be
understood from understanding the first part. As beings who
partake in God’s necessary existence and attributive nature, we
are currently in a state of self-imposed separation from God due
to our self-destructive fascination with ego and the objects of
ego. It is ego, and the subsequent selfishness and
self-centeredness that result from ego, that produce the various
layers of illusory self that we mistakenly identify with our true,
spiritual identity.
The “human person” is in actuality a complex
symbiosis comprised of several distinct aggregates, including
physical body (deha), mind substance, (manas), intellect (buddhi),
ego (ahamkara), the vital force (prana), and ultimately atman as
the source of consciousness and animating source. While the
“human person” is an artificial and temporal construct comprised
of these many elements, it is the atman alone that is the true
self, and that is eternal, true, beautiful, indestructible, and
blissful by its own inherent nature, having God (Brahman) as its
source of being.
We thus find ourselves in human form (and
sometimes other forms!) in an endlessly unsuccessful attempt to
selfishly enjoy ourselves in the illusion that we can have a
meaningful existence without the benefit of God’s love. We are
identifying with the temporal instead of the eternal, with the
shallow instead of the profound, with the material instead of the
spiritual, with the illusory instead of the real.
The meaning of life in human form is to thus
reverse this negative and self-defeating tendency to serve our
ego, and to instead once again serve God. We are here, as human
beings, to transcend our merely human nature, to re-embrace our
true identity as eternal spiritual beings, and to partake of the
Divine nature that is our birthright, that is our natural state of
being, and that is our true home. We are here to know, and to
love, and to serve the Divine.
In Sanatana Dharma, God is presented as the
source of all goodness, acceptance, compassion, and non-judgmental
love. God is embraced and loved without restrictions, without
fear, without force, and without loss. This is a very different
conception of the Absolute when compared to the notion we find in
the Western, Abrahamic religious constructs of Judaism,
Christianity and Islam. Unlike in the Abrahamic religions, in
Sanatana Dharma we find a concept of God as not only being a
thoroughly transcendent source of reality, but also as a lovingly
imminent and intimate friend who provides us all with a means for
achieving immediate knowledge, and a direct and ecstatic
experience of Him.
The path of Sanatana Dharma offers us such
profoundly philosophical works as the Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads,
and Vedas for the unfailing guidance and knowledge necessary to
comprehend life’s meaning. It also offers us a systematic path of
spiritual practice that leads directly to a personal experience of
the Divine. This path includes the ancient and highly effective
processes of Yoga, meditation, puja, and devotion to God.
To truly know the answer to the meaning of
human life, however, it is not enough ultimately to merely engage
in an intellectual understanding of Truth. Rather, we need to
personally experience the sweet taste of Truth as the immediate
presence of God in our hearts and in our lives. To experience the
profound bliss of God’s presence in your life, and to truly know
why we have the joy of existence, please explore the profound
depths of spiritual realization that Sanatana Dharma has to offer
you. To be human is to ask.
About the Author

Sri Dharma
Pravartaka Acharya (Dr. Frank Morales, Ph.D.) is an American
who has been studying, practicing, and teaching Dharma and Yoga
spirituality for over 30 years. He is also an initiated Hindu
priest and Acharya (Spiritual Preceptor). He is the
Founder-President of the International Sanatana Dharma Society (a
dynamic world-wide movement dedicated to teaching Dharma
spirituality) and the Resident Acharya (Spiritual Teacher) of the
Hindu Temple of Omaha, Nebraska. He has a Ph.D. and an M.A. in
Religious Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as
well as a B.A. in philosophy from Loyola University Chicago. He
has lectured on Dharma at dozens of top universities, including
such prestigious institutions as Harvard, Columbia, Rutgers,
Cornell, and Northwestern. He has also served as a consultant for
such Fortune 500 companies as Ford Motor Corporation and Lucent
Technology. Currently recognized as one of the nation’s leading
authorities on Yoga spirituality and meditation, he is recognized
by the global Hindu community as one of the leading Hindu Acharyas
(Spiritual Preceptors) in the world today. With a very large
international following of both Indian and Western students, Sri
Acharya Ji is especially renowned for his highly authentic and
radically transformative approach to Dharmic spirituality, his
authoritative and scholarly method of teaching, his clear emphasis
on serious spiritual practice, and his ability to provide his
students with a profoundly direct experience of self-realization
and of the Divine. Sri Acharya Ji’s students, followers and
supporters number in the thousands in both the Indian and
non-Indian communities.
"Dr. Frank
Morales represents the Sankalpa [the will] of the Hindu people and
the cause of Sanatana Dharma. I urge all Hindus everywhere to give
him your full support, assistance, and encouragement in his
crucial work. He needs and deserves our help."
- Dr. David Frawley (Oct. 14, 2007)
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Copyright 2007, Frank Morales. You may print, duplicate or copy this article
only if you credit the author and not alter or add to the author's work in any
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